Death toll rises to 160 in Dhaka building collapse

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Rescuers in Bangladesh have continued to hunt for survivors in a collapsed building as the death toll rose to 161 and criticism mounted of foreign firms that source cheap clothes from the country.
More than 1,000 people were injured when the site housing five garment factories on the outskirts of Dhaka imploded on Wednesday, allegedly after managers ignored workers’ warnings that the building had become unstable.
Flags flew at half-mast on Thursday as the shell-shocked country declared a day of mourning for the victims of the nation’s worst factory disaster, which highlighted anew safety concerns in Bangladesh’s vital garment industry. Army Brigadier General Mohammed Siddiqui Alam Shikder said many people are still trapped in the building, which housed a number of garment factories employing hundreds of people.
Workers had warned a day earlier that large cracks had developed in the structure. A clearer picture of the rescue operation would be available by afternoon, Shikder said. Searchers worked through the night to get through the jumbled mess of concrete with drills or their bare hands, passing water and flashlights to those pinned inside the building. “I gave them whistles, water, torchlights. I heard them cry. We can’t leave them behind this way,” said fire official Abul Khayer.
Local police chief Mohammaed Asaduzzaman said police and the government’s Capital Development Authority had filed separate cases of negligence against the building owner. Searchers cut holes in the jumbled mess of concrete, passing water and torches to those pinned inside the building as rescue operations illuminated by floodlights continued through the night. The disaster came less than five months after a factory fire killed 112 people and underscored the unsafe conditions in Bangladesh’s booming garment industry, the second biggest in the world.